Stephanie Malmborg, deputy community development director, said the city has reached out to Merriam, Lenexa and Overland Park to see if they would “piggyback” on some of the improvements that Shawnee plans to make to the corridor.

“We’re trying to figure out how to make 75th Street prettier and safer,” Malmborg said. “That’s kind of the goal of the study in very simple terms.”

Shawnee is developing a design guide to re-imagine a transportation vision for 75th Street. The study will focus on the following elements:

Improving bicycle and pedestrian connections

Enhancing bus stop facilities

Beautifying with new streetscape amenities

Exploring redevelopment opportunities

“If you’ve ever driven on 75th Street, please take the survey,” Malmborg said. “If you’ve ever driven on it, we want to know what you think about it. We want to know how you’d like to improve it.”

Paul Lindstrom, senior project engineer for Shawnee public works, said the 75th Street improvement project, roughly $2.3 million, is on the city’s list of capital improvement projects for the next 10 years. The city is also requesting funding from Johnson County’s County Assistance Road System program.

City staff will shape the planned 2020 project around those elements from the study, which is funded by a $60,000 grant from the Mid-America Regional Council. Malmborg said the community feedback will shape city staff’s recommendations for the corridor; those recommendations will be published this fall.

“Nothing that we’ve got on our survey is paved in gold or anything, so we’re not expecting anything we wouldn’t possibly be able to achieve,” Malmborg added. “We’re just hoping to find out what the community would like to see because we want to see more people liking the way that they’re driving and walking around town.”